Effect of Housing Condition and Diet on the Gut Microbiota of Weanling Immunocompromised Mice

Author:

Thurman Colleen E1,Klores Molly M2,Wolfe Annie E3,Poueymirou William T4,Levee Ellen M2,Ericsson Aaron C5,Franklin Craig L5,Reddyjarugu Balu2

Affiliation:

1. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Tarrytown, New York; NYU-Regeneron Training Program in Laboratory Animal Medicine, New York, New York; Animal Science Center, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts;, Email: colleen.thurman@gmail.com

2. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Tarrytown, New York; NYU-Regeneron Training Program in Laboratory Animal Medicine, New York, New York;

3. Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine

4. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Tarrytown, New York

5. Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine; University of Missouri Metagenomics Center; MU Mutant Mouse Resource and Research Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri

Abstract

Gastrointestinal microbiota are affected by a wide variety of extrinsic and intrinsic factors. In the husbandry of laboratory mice and design of experiments, controlling these factors where possible provides more reproducible results. However, the microbiome is dynamic, particularly in the weeks immediately after weaning. In this study, we characterized the baseline gastrointestinal microbiota of immunocompromised mice housed under standard conditions for our facility for 6 weeks after weaning, with housing either in an isolator or in individually ventilated cages and a common antibiotic diet (trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole). We compared these conditions to a group fed a standard diet and a group that was weaned to a standard diet then switched to antibiotic diet after 2 weeks. We found no clear effect of diet on richness and α diversity of the gastrointestinal microbiota. However, diet did affect which taxa were enriched at the end of the experiment. The change to antibiotic diet during the experiment did not convert the gastrointestinal microbiome to a state similar to mice consistently fed antibiotic diet, which may highlight the importance of the initial post-weaning period in the establishment of the gastrointestinal microbiome. We also observed a strong effect of housing type (isolator compared with individually ventilated cage) on the richness, α diversity, β diversity, and taxa enriched over the course of the experiment. Investigating whether the diet or microbiome affects a certain strain's phenotype is warranted in some cases. However, our findings do not suggest that maintaining immunocompromised mice on antibiotic feed has a clinical benefit when potential pathogens are operationally excluded, nor does it result in a more consistent or controlled microbiome in the post-weaning period.

Publisher

American Association for Laboratory Animal Science

Subject

General Veterinary,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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